Here’s my tour last weekend of CN’s Caribou…a.k.a ‘The Newfie Bullet’ Narrow Gauge Equipment at the Railway Society of Newfoundland on a short section of remaining narrow-gauge track at Mile 404 in Corner Brook.
This was North America’s last full-service narrow-gauge passenger train with Coaches, Sleepers and Diner that made it’s last run in 1969 Some coaches were still in service for another 20 years on Mixed Trains until the railway was abandoned 1n 1988.
But there’s been a bit of a play on paint schemes here! Old #593 would never have hauled equipment painted in CN’s 1960’s era black-white scheme…and the cars would have had the red ‘CN’ logo…not that green-gold ‘NFLD Railway’ tilted logo that disappeared after 1949 when Newfoundland joined Canada and CN assumed control of the railway.
You may have missed my posting of my posting of pictures taken prior to the end of passenger service when I made the round trip in an upper berth on a Chicago Railroad Club excursion that included the International and the Ocean and the overnigiht ship crossing both ways.
Rather than reposting, I’ll try to update the old thread.
Thanks for those great shots ghCBNS! I’ve been to Newfoundland twice but never made it to Corner Brook.
In Saint John’s Bowring Park there’s a display of Newfoundland Railway equipment, but not as elaborate as the Corner Brook displays. There’s a passenger coach displayed with the Nefoundland Railway herald and if I remember correctly the coach is painted a color very similar to the Pennsylvania Railroad’s “Tuscan Red,” definately not in that CN black and white scheme.
No…I can’t see the photos there so if you can post a couple…that would be great! Thanks.
I live about 2 hrs from the Newfoundland Ferry and have been on the Island often. Back in the '80s I did get to ride a couple of the Mixed Trains before the railway was abandoned in 1988.
In recent times a buddy and I have taken our ATVs on portions of the old right-of-way.
Question: When they used rail, did they load into cars that changed trucks and were carfloated to North Sydney, or was the Gypsum simply transferred from railcars to ships?
Looking at topo maps, it appears the tram line went directly from the mine to the ship load (in the distance in the photo). There was no rail service to the mine indicated on the map.
Thanks. I am very lucky that I took that “grab picture.” and without any planning or time to check shutter speed, lens opening, and focus, that it came out so well, without any real electronic darkroom manipulation.